Thursday, November 6, 2014
Vote all you want. The secret government won’t change.
The people we elect aren’t
the ones calling the shots, says Tufts University’s Michael Glennon
By Jordan Michael Smith
| October 19, 2014
The voters who put Barack Obama in office expected some big
changes. From the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping to Guantanamo Bay to the
Patriot Act, candidate Obama was a defender of civil liberties and privacy,
promising a dramatically different approach from his predecessor.
But
six years into his administration, the Obama version of national security looks
almost indistinguishable from the one he inherited. Guantanamo Bay remains
open. The NSA has, if anything, become more aggressive in monitoring Americans.
Drone strikes have escalated. Most recently it was reported that the same
president who won a Nobel Prize in part for promoting nuclear disarmament is
spending up to $1 trillion modernizing and revitalizing America’s nuclear
weapons.
Why
did the face in the Oval Office change but the policies remain the same?
Critics tend to focus on Obama himself, a leader who perhaps has shifted with
politics to take a harder line. But Tufts University political scientist
Michael J. Glennon has a more pessimistic answer: Obama couldn’t have changed
policies much even if he tried.
Though
it’s a bedrock American principle that citizens can steer their own government
by electing new officials, Glennon suggests that in practice, much of our
government no longer works that way. In a new book, “National Security and
Double Government,” he catalogs the ways that the defense and national security
apparatus is effectively self-governing, with virtually no accountability,
transparency, or checks and balances of any kind. He uses the term “double
government”: There’s the one we elect, and then there’s the one behind it,
steering huge swaths of policy almost unchecked. Elected officials end up
serving as mere cover for the real decisions made by the bureaucracy.
Glennon
cites the example of Obama and his team being shocked and angry to discover
upon taking office that the military gave them only two options for the war in
Afghanistan: The United States could add more troops, or the United States
could add a lot more troops. Hemmed in, Obama added 30,000 more troops.
Glennon’s
critique sounds like an outsider’s take, even a radical one. In fact, he is the
quintessential insider: He was legal counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and a consultant to various congressional committees, as well as to
the State Department. “National Security and Double Government” comes favorably
blurbed by former members of the Defense Department, State Department, White
House, and even the CIA. And he’s not a conspiracy theorist: Rather, he sees
the problem as one of “smart, hard-working, public-spirited people acting in
good faith who are responding to systemic incentives”—without any meaningful
oversight to rein them in.
How exactly
has double government taken hold? And what can be done about it? Glennon spoke
with Ideas from his office at Tufts’ Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. This
interview has been condensed and edited.
IDEAS: Where does the term “double government” come from?
GLENNON:It comes from Walter Bagehot’s famous theory,
unveiled in the 1860s. Bagehot was the scholar who presided over the birth of
the Economist magazine—they still have a column named after him. Bagehot tried
to explain in his book “The English Constitution” how the British government
worked. He suggested that there are two sets of institutions. There are the
“dignified institutions,” the monarchy and the House of Lords, which people
erroneously believed ran the government. But he suggested that there was in
reality a second set of institutions, which he referred to as the “efficient
institutions,” that actually set governmental policy. And those were the House of Commons, the prime
minister, and the British cabinet.
IDEAS: What evidence exists for saying America has a double
government?
GLENNON:I was curious why a president such as Barack
Obama would embrace the very same national security and counterterrorism
policies that he campaigned eloquently against. Why would that president
continue those same policies in case after case after case? I initially wrote
it based on my own experience and personal knowledge and conversations with
dozens of individuals in the military, law enforcement, and intelligence
agencies of our government, as well as, of course, officeholders on Capitol
Hill and in the courts. And the documented
evidence in the book is substantial—there are 800 footnotes in the book.
IDEAS: Why would policy makers hand over the national-security
keys to unelected officials?
GLENNON: It hasn’t been a conscious decision....Members of
Congress are generalists and need to defer to experts within the national
security realm, as elsewhere. They are particularly concerned about being
caught out on a limb having made a wrong judgment about national security and
tend, therefore, to defer to experts, who tend to exaggerate threats. The
courts similarly tend to defer to the expertise of the network that defines
national security policy.
The presidency itself is not a top-down institution, as
many people in the public believe, headed by a president who gives orders and
causes the bureaucracy to click its heels and salute. National security policy
actually bubbles up from within the bureaucracy. Many of the more controversial
policies, from the mining of Nicaragua’s harbors to the NSA surveillance
program, originated within the bureaucracy. John Kerry was not exaggerating
when he said that some of those programs are “on autopilot.”
IDEAS: Isn’t this just another way of saying that big
bureaucracies are difficult to change?
GLENNON: It’s much more serious than that. These particular
bureaucracies don’t set truck widths or determine railroad freight rates. They
make nerve-center security decisions that in a democracy can be irreversible,
that can close down the marketplace of ideas, and can result in some very dire
consequences.
IDEAS: Couldn’t Obama’s national-security decisions just result
from the difference in vantage point between being a campaigner and being the
commander-in-chief, responsible for 320 million lives?
GLENNON: There is an element of what you described. There is not
only one explanation or one cause for the amazing continuity of American
national security policy. But obviously there is something else going on when
policy after policy after policy all continue virtually the same way that they
were in the George W. Bush administration.
IDEAS: This isn’t how we’re taught to think of the American
political system.
GLENNON: I think the American people are deluded, as Bagehot
explained about the British population, that the institutions that provide the
public face actually set American national security policy. They believe that
when they vote for a president or member of Congress or succeed in bringing a
case before the courts, that policy is going to change. Now, there are many
counter-examples in which these branches do affect policy, as Bagehot predicted
there would be. But the larger picture is still true—policy by and large in the
national security realm is made by the concealed institutions.
IDEAS: Do we have any hope of fixing the problem?
GLENNON: The ultimate problem is the pervasive political
ignorance on the part of the American people. And indifference to the threat
that is emerging from these concealed institutions. That is where the energy
for reform has to come from: the American people. Not from government.
Government is very much the problem here. The people have to take the bull by
the horns. And that’s a very difficult thing to do, because the ignorance is in
many ways rational. There is very little profit to be had in learning about,
and being active about, problems that you can’t affect, policies that you can’t
change.
Labels: Election, Shadow Government
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